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Poetic Edda

Thou wouldst thy wisdom make known:What name has the steed  that from East anewBrings night for the noble gods?"
  Othin spake:14.[1] "Hrimfaxi name they  the steed that anewBrings night for the noble gods;Each morning foam  from his bit there falls,And thence come the dews in the dales."
  Vafthruthnir spake:15. "Speak forth now, Gagnrath,  if there from the floorThou wouldst thy wisdom make known:What name has the river  that 'twixt the realmsOf the gods and the giants goes?"
  Othin spake:16.[2] "Ifing is the river  that 'twixt the realmsOf the gods and the giants goes;For all time ever  open it flows,No ice on the river there is."
  Vafthruthnir spake:17.[3] "Speak forth now, Gagnrath,  if there from the floor

    Here, and in general throughout the poem, the two-line introductory formulæ are abbreviated in the manuscripts.

  1. Hrimfaxi: "Frosty-Mane."
  2. Ifing: there is no other reference to this river, which never freezes, so that the giants cannot cross it.

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